Illegal immigrants: assimilation or rejection
By Carlos Alberto Montaner*
The greatest irritant afflicting the First World is
illegal immigration. Literally tens of millions of Africans, Asians and
Latin Americans desperately attempt to reach the shores of countries like
Spain, Italy, France and, of course, the United States. But the poor also
weep. Sometimes, migratory pressure occurs between Third World countries.
It's a gradation of horror. For example, the Dominicans must struggle with
the waves of Haitians who, by the thousands, have crossed the border
illegally since the death of dictator Trujillo in 1961. Nobody knows if one
million or two million of them have settled in Santo Domingo or have hidden
and are secretly being exploited in sugar plantations. The Costa Ricans have
in their territory more than half-a-million Nicaraguans. If Daniel Ortega
and the Sandinistas again govern cruelly and stupidly, that figure will
increase substantially in a short while.
In every country where immigrants abound, the dilemma is
the same: on one hand, society usually detests them; on the other, it asks
them to assimilate and criticizes them when they exhibit their differences.
Being suspicious of whoever dresses, speaks, eats, prays or gesticulates in
a different manner seems to be a cultural or genetically codified reaction
in all societies. Our cousins, the charming chimpanzees, methodically
disembowel any outsiders of their own species who approach their group.
Sometimes the human animal displays a similar conduct. In Alcorcón, a
neighborhood on the periphery of Madrid, even as I write these words, some
Latin American and Spanish youth gangs go at each other with switchblades.
They're not too far from the chimpanzees.
Obviously, the ideal outcome is for the foreigners to
integrate and assimilate into the country to which they have emigrated, but
the affair becomes complicated when society, far from encouraging that
phenomenon of transculturization, places obstacles in its path. How? Simple;
by denying adult immigrants the possibility of working and young immigrants
the chance to study. The workplace -- including the armed forces, of course
-- and the school are the two perfect places for foreigners to increase
contact with the new land to which they have emigrated. Why be surprised
when illegal immigrants form ghettoes where they perpetuate their customs
and live on the margins of society if society itself closes the doors that
lead to integration?
There is a case of successful assimilation that deserves
to be studied with attention: that of Cubans in the United States. In four
decades, Cubans in the U.S. have integrated remarkably in American society.
Theirs is a minority that participates passionately in public life and has
two senators and four representatives in the U.S. Congress, one Cabinet
member, a dozen ambassadors -- active or retired -- and an extraordinary
heft in the institutions of the state of Florida, whose Assembly is presided
by a young member of that community.
Even more impressive is the degree of integration and
assimilation in civilian society and the productive apparatus. According to
the official census, the second generation of Cuban-Americans has a higher
degree of education and income than the U.S. average, while the number of
enterprises created or owned by this group is one of the highest among all
the ethnic groups studied by demographers and sociologists who study this
branch of econometrics.
Why has the assimilation of Cubans been so remarkable?
Probably because in 1966 the U.S. Congress, faced with the presence in U.S.
soil of several tens of thousands of illegal Cubans who couldn't be returned
to Cuba, passed a wise measure called the "Adjustment Act" that allowed
Cubans to swiftly gain residence, work, study, create businesses and
integrate into U.S. society.
Experience and common sense indicate that that is the
most sensible way to deal with this huge problem. The conflict disappears or
is attenuated when illegal immigrants become legal, study, begin to pay
taxes and benefit with their work the whole of the society where they live.
Granted, that formula perhaps stimulates immigration, but that consequence
is less evil than keeping millions of people on the margins of society. If
we want to promote assimilation, we must build bridges, not dig moats.
January 28, 2007
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